scripts and microphones

 

The Edith Ruddick Award for Radio Playwriting

With support from the Peggy Ramsey Foundation

(PLEASE NOTE THAT THE EDITH RUDDICK AWARD RAN FOR ONE YEAR ONLY

THIS PAGE HAS BEEN LEFT ON THE WEBSITE FOR ARCHIVE PURPOSES)


Edith Ruddick

The Edith Ruddick Award was launched in May at the Criterion Theatre and offers any writer who has been produced by IRDP in the last 10 years the chance to win a £2,000 commission to write a 45 minute play.

The Award is being established in memory of actress and writer Edith Ruddick who made a significant contribution to radio drama throughout her life. Her career encompassed BBC Radio's Children's Hour and Drama alongside Stanley Baxter, Duncan Macrae and Fay Compton. She played alongside Fulton Mackay and Burt Lancaster in the hit movie set in Scotland 'Local Hero' in 1986. In addition to a distinguished acting career in theatre, television films and radio, Edith wrote radio scripts, lectured on various topics, appeared in TV advertisements and achieved instant street recognition as a TV celebrity panellist. Her autobiography My Mother's Daughter was published in 1995.

Writers are being asked to produce a 2 page synopsis. The judges will consider the synopsis and the writers' CVs and select one script for production. The first Edith Ruddick award has also been made possible as a result of a special grant from the Peggy Ramsey Foundation which recognised the need to provide follow-up support for writers developed in the independent sector of UK radio.

The judging panel includes Edith Ruddick's sons Jonathan and Richard Brill, the distinguished director and former head of BBC Radio Drama John Tydeman, Sunday Times Radio columnist Paul Donovan, Jean-Norman Benedetti (an international scholar specialising in Stanislavski), IRDP directors Richard Shannon and Tim Crook and IRDP script development and Internet communications director Marja Giejgo.

The Edith Ruddick award was launched on May 15th when writers, actors and directors gathered at the Criterion Theatre in Piccadilly Circus to celebrate the announcement of the ten winning writers in the Woolwich Young Radio Playwrights' Competition. Writers will be invited to submit synopses during May, June, July and August. They will include all previous winners of the Woolwich Young Radio Playwrights' Competition, the London Radio Playwrights' Festival and also all writers who had short plays broadcast as part of the Festival. The judging panel will convene in September and the winning writer will be announced in October. The commissioned script will be produced and directed by the award-winning IRDP production / direction team of Tim Crook, Richard Shannon and Marja Giejgo. The play will be performed by the country's leading actors and sound designed in cinematic Dolby Prologic Surround Sound. The production will be encoded and presented on the IRDP web site, as well as being broadcast on LBC.

The family of Edith Ruddick hopes that matching funding from their foundation will secure further years of these awards and widen the opportunities for writers in the alternative field of radio to be professionally remunerated and recognised.

My Mother's Daughter

The idea for the award was inspired by Edith Ruddick's sons, Jonathan and Richard Brill.

Jonathan Brill has had a distinguished career in the Arts and Education. He has been chairman of the London Arts Board and Rose Bruford College, and he is currently chairman of the Philharmonic Orchestra at Hertfordshire University. He says "Mum would have loved all this; she revelled in the PR thing. When her book was launched she did three quite formal reading / signing sessions, and although her health was failing, she took questions from the floor and even dealt with an affectionate heckler. Radio was important to her all her life, increasingly so when her sight began to fail her. One of her strongest assets as an actress was her voice, which found full expression on radio".

Richard Brill is a Computer consultant who emigrated to California in 1982. He has worked for many industry leading companies and large government agencies including the Los Angeles Mayor's Office. He is currently consulting for a leading entertainment insurance company. He says "Mum had a great sense of responsibility and in her later years read newspapers for the blind. Her voice was an instrument she loved using and she encouraged others to use theirs. She loved acting and would be tickled pink with this award".

The illustration shows the cover of Edith Ruddick's autobiography - My Mother's Daughter.

Independent Radio Drama Productions has established an alternative culture and opportunity for original scriptwriting in audio drama since 1987. Well over a hundred writers of all backgrounds and all ages have been professionally produced with broadcasting on LBC in London, local radio services elsewhere and on the World Wide Web.


Results of The Edith Ruddick Award

 

this web page is brought to you by:

www.irdp.co.uk